
Column: Opening Day is upon us, and the new baseball book ‘Justice Batted Last' hits a homer
Another baseball season, heavy with hope, begins on March 17 with the first of two games between the Chicago Cubs and the Los Angeles Dodgers in, of all the 'we are the world' places, Tokyo.
What is being called 'traditional' Opening Day is set to take on March 27, with one Opening Day game moved to March 28 so that George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida, can be fully mended from the damage caused by Hurricane Milton.
As a member of the last generation to come of age before baseball was overwhelmed by money, steroids and television contracts, I have to admit my excitement for opening days, for baseball in general, has waned. I don't have a mitt in my closet and I couldn't tell you who plays shortstop for the Milwaukee Brewers.
Still, reflexively at the beginning of each new season, I try to find and read baseball books in an attempt to recapture a piece of my youth.
I have the advantage of a pile of baseball books that have come my way over the last decades and I can dip in return to favorites if need be.
I almost always read what I think is the best non-fiction baseball story, that being by John Updike in The New Yorker in 1960, writing about Ted Williams hitting a home run in his last at-bat in Boston's Fenway Park. It's titled 'Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu,' and contains this type of spectacular writing:
'Like a feather caught in a vortex, Williams ran around the square of bases at the center of our beseeching screaming. He ran as he always ran out home runs — hurriedly, unsmiling, head down, as if our praise were a storm of rain to get out of. He didn't tip his cap. Though we thumped, wept, and chanted 'We want Ted' for minutes after he hid in the dugout, he did not come back. Our noise for some seconds passed beyond excitement into a kind of immense open anguish, a wailing, a cry to be saved. But immortality is nontransferable. The papers said that the other players, and even the umpires on the field, begged him to come out and acknowledge us in some way, but he never had and did not now. Gods do not answer letters.'
Fiction? I'll reach for Bernard Malamud's 1952's 'The Natural.' It's better than the 1984 Robert Redford movie, though I like that too.
In the book, you'll read: 'He remembered how satisfied he had been as a youngster, and that with the little he had had — a dog, a stick, an aloneness he loved (which did not bleed him like his later loneliness), and he wished he could have lived longer in his boyhood. This was an old thought with him.'
My most recent new baseball book is 'Justice Batted Last: Ernie Banks, Minnie Miñoso, and the Unheralded Players Who Integrated Chicago's Major League Teams' (3 Field Books). Deeply researched and written by Don Zminda, a smart and passionate guy, it is a winner.
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A studio photo of Cubs great Ernie Banks early in his career. (John Austad/Chicago Tribune)
Zminda is a former director of STATS LLC, the Loop-based provider of sports information and statistics, and the author of the books, one about Harry Caray and, showing his (or his publisher's) affinity for long titles, another called 'Double Plays and Double Crosses: The Black Sox and Baseball in 1920.'
He writes that long before Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier, 'Chicago was a major hub of Black baseball,' and proceeds to give the reader reasons why. None of them are pretty.
But he makes Ernie Banks, who was Black, and Minnie Miñoso (full name Saturnino Orestes Armas Arrieta Miñoso, and Cuban), come to life along with dozens of deserving others, such as pitcher Robert Luther Burns. Less formally known as 'Blood' Burns, he expressed a charmingly laid back attitude in salary negotiating: 'People would say, how much bread do you want? I'd say, let me talk to the man … and sometimes I would say, that's not enough for me … but I got on with them. I made money, I spent money and I had a hell of a good time. I don't regret a bit.'
Banks (of the Cubs) and Miñoso (White Sox) are the 'stars' of this book. But we also learn of the many others who deserved to play in the majors and why they didn't. Famously, the Tribune's Mike Royko, a lifelong passionate Cubs, focused on this in what would be his final column, printed only a week before his death on April 29, 1997. The headline says it all: 'It was Wrigley, not some goat, who cursed the Cubs.'
OK then, Opening Day … Enjoy, watch, cheer, boo, or read. Baseball can still bring out the best in some people and allow you to touch your childhood, a simpler time.
rkogan@chicagotribune.com
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Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Column: In the Showdown in Motown finale, the Chicago Cubs lose 4-0 to the Detroit Tigers
DETROIT — Some good-natured bantering occurred over the weekend between Chicago Cubs president Jed Hoyer and Detroit Tigers president Scott Harris, who worked his way up the ladder after joining the Cubs as director of baseball operations in 2012 under Hoyer and former president Theo Epstein. They helped the Cubs build a championship team together before Harris moved on to become the general manager of the San Francisco Giants and then president of the Tigers in September 2022. Harris was informed Sunday that the winner of the rubber game between the Cubs and Tigers would be awarded the 'Theo Cup,' a trophy that only exists in the imagination of a few media members looking to replicate the Vedder Cup, a newly recognized award named for Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder that goes to the winner of the San Diego Padres-Seattle Mariners series. 'The decisive game of the Theo Cup?' Harris said when apprised of what was at stake. 'Jed and I have talked, yes, but nothing worth sharing.' Cup or no cup, the Tigers wound up with a 4-0 win in the Showdown in Motown to take the interleague series. There was no champagne celebration afterward, but at least fans were treated to an interesting series between two of baseball's best teams, and some impromptu fireworks Sunday when Nico Hoerner was ejected by plate umpire Derek Thomas in the fifth inning for arguing a called third strike, followed by manager Craig Counsell's ejection after backing Hoerner. While the New York Yankees-Boston Red Sox rivalry took center stage on the baseball calendar, Detroit was the place to be this weekend. The Cubs move on to Philadelphia to complete their three-city road trip, facing another top team, albeit one that lost eight of nine heading into Sunday. The Phillies took two of three from the Cubs in late April at Wrigley Field. Matthew Boyd will start in the opener, followed by Colin Rea and Ben Brown. Sunday's finale featured an intriguing matchup between Cubs rookie Cade Horton and Jack Flaherty, who returned to the Tigers after being dealt to the Los Angeles Dodgers at the trade deadline and winning a ring. Flaherty threw six shutout innings, allowing two hits, while Horton suffered his first career loss in his sixth appearance. Horton struggled in the first inning, putting the first two men on before giving up a two-out, two-run double to Spencer Torkelson. Flaherty didn't give up a hit until Pete Crow-Armstrong singled with two on and one out in the fourth, but Ian Happ was thrown out at the plate by right fielder Kerry Washington, and the Cubs failed to score when Michael Busch lined out to center with the bases loaded, ending the threat. The Tigers padded the lead on Riley Greene's two-run single off Horton in the fifth, while the Cubs couldn't muster up any offense against Flaherty. Expectations have grown considerably for the Cubs over the last several weeks, with the team off to its best start since 2016. The Cubs were considered a favorite for a division title all along, but few thought they could hang in the same area code as the megabucks Dodgers or New York Mets. The offensive explosion and improvement of the bullpen now has many Cubs fans thinking bigger things, which brings more attention to the team. 'I don't know that anything has changed from that perspective,' Counsell said in a conversation before Sunday's game. Expectations haven't changed despite having the league's best record? 'The expectations are just playing good baseball, doing our jobs the right way and continuing to do that on a daily basis,' he said. 'Those are the expectations.' That may be true, but certainly Cubs fans' expectations have risen, right? 'I'm telling you what we worry about,' Counsell replied. 'We just worry about the stuff we control every day and I think those standards in itself are something that's difficult to achieve every day. But it's what we've been working at since the beginning.' Counsell has downplayed the Tigers series because it's still June, and it may have meant more to Harris and Hoyer, two old friends with bragging rights at stake. Even before Sunday, there was a lot for Hoyer and Harris to talk about, from Tarik Skubal's dominance in the Tigers' 3-1 win on Friday, to five Cubs home runs Saturday in their 6-1 victory. Harris denied there was any trash-texting between him and Hoyer after their team's respective wins, and said the competition is friendly. 'I would characterize it as we're both very competitive, and we both want to win today,' Harris said. 'But after today, I really pull for those guys. There are just a lot of really good people over there and I want them to be successful. I know they will be successful because they're really talented and they built a really, really good baseball team. 'We share observations about each other's teams, because a lot of times those conversations are really constructive, and it's useful for someone like me to see the Tigers through an outsider's lens. And he's an outsider, and I imagine that's useful for him to understand the perspective of an outsider watching his team. So we often share observations. I find them useful. I don't know if he finds them useful.' Hoyer did not make the trip to Detroit, which Harris speculated was because Hoyer wanted to spend time with his family, not because he didn't buy into the importance of the Cubs-Tigers series. 'You're more bought into the Theo Cup than Jed is,' Harris said. Guilty as charged. Either way, the rematch of the Theo Cup would have to wait until October, and that's only if the two teams meet in the World Series. That's a long way off, and obviously a lot has to happen for both teams just to get there. But the way things have been going for the Cubs and Tigers the first two-plus months, it's no longer just a pipe dream.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Flaherty fans 9 in 6 scoreless innings as Tigers beat Cubs 4-0 in matchup of AL-NL Central leaders
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Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Manny Machado's homer makes the difference as Padres edge Brewers 1-0
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